Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) provide adaptable compute architectures for mission-critical systems requiring deterministic performance, high-throughput processing, and reconfigurable logic.
US Semiconductor supports programs in determining and supplying FPGA pathways aligned to mission-defined qualification requirements, radiation exposure profiles, and lifecycle continuity.
Processing capability
Control-loop stability
Upset tolerance
Thermal stability
Long-term program viability
Space and high-altitude missions require evaluation of TID accumulation, SEE susceptibility, and LET thresholds. Structured pathway determination ensures FPGA platforms align to mission exposure without unnecessary hardened overhead.
Mission-critical architectures typically evaluate several FPGA classes depending on performance requirements, environmental exposure, and lifecycle expectations.
Fully radiation-hardened FPGA platforms are designed for high-radiation environments such as deep-space missions and high-reliability defense systems. These devices offer defined radiation tolerance thresholds but may involve higher cost and limited lifecycle availability.
Radiation-tolerant FPGA devices provide intermediate protection for environments such as LEO missions and avionics platforms where exposure levels remain below deep-space thresholds.
Commercial FPGA platforms may support mission systems when aligned with structured qualification strategies and mitigation techniques such as redundancy and configuration scrubbing.
FPGAs frequently serve as the deterministic compute backbone for guidance, navigation, payload processing, and real-time control systems.
Common risks include configuration upsets, timing drift under thermal stress, vendor discontinuation, and compatibility issues across replacement devices.
US Semiconductor provides FPGA components aligned to mission-defined qualification requirements, defines pathway strategies across radiation-hardened, radiation-tolerant, and commercial platforms, coordinates validation where required, and preserves deterministic system behavior and lifecycle continuity.
Align commercial FPGA platforms to mission-defined qualification and radiation tolerance requirements.
Evaluate FPGA architectures against radiation exposure, configuration upset risk, and mission duration.
Support deterministic FPGA architectures for control-loop stability and real-time system behavior.
Early alignment of voltage compatibility, package continuity, radiation exposure, and lifecycle continuity protects schedule integrity and mission stability.
They provide deterministic, reconfigurable logic for control systems, signal processing, and real-time operations where stable timing is required.
Radiation can cause configuration upsets or functional errors. Mitigation strategies such as scrubbing and redundancy are often required.
Yes, when aligned with structured qualification and mitigation strategies. Suitability depends on mission exposure and system design.
Configuration instability, radiation susceptibility, and lifecycle discontinuity can all impact long-term system performance.
Outline the specific component or system constraint your program is facing. Technical discussion only, focused on requirements, tradeoffs, and viable pathways.
"*" indicates required fields
Define your program context and where component decisions must be made. We’ll align on constraints, requirements, and the most effective pathway forward.
"*" indicates required fields